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Chapter 7 At Glance: Queen, Working Mother, and the Making of the Royal Family

  • Writer: Liora Hendelman-Baavur
    Liora Hendelman-Baavur
  • Jul 2, 2020
  • 1 min read

Updated: Jul 3, 2020

Chapter 7 in my book Creating the Modern Iranian Woman: Popular Culture between Two Revolutions explores the media image of the royal family and the monarchy’s crises of legitimacy by focusing on the Shah’s third wife, Queen Farah Pahlavi, who played out many of the internal contradictions embodied by the modern woman of royal Iran’s modernized patriarchy.


Her public representations, both in the national and foreign media, crafted her image as a mediator between traditionalism and modernity, Iranianess and globalization. Different sets of representations presented Farah Pahlavi as a young capable woman who managed both family and public voluntary obligations, while personifying a modern "middle-class" Iranian woman and mother, alongside her promotion as an international celebrity.


Appraising the propagation of the former Iranian queen, the Shah and the royal Pahlavi family by crosschecking both the local and international press, sheds additional light on the fading image of the Iranian monarchy, and on the complex nature of cultural contact and exchange between Iran and the West.


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